The Big Dig
Associated Press :
BOSTON
- When the clock runs out on 2007, Boston will quietly mark the end of one of
the most tumultuous eras in the city's history: The Big Dig, the nation's most
complex and costliest highway project, will officially come to an end.
Don't expect any champagne toasts.
After a history marked by
engineering triumphs, tunnels leaks, epic traffic jams, last year's death of a
motorist crushed by falling concrete panels and a price tag that soared from
$2.6 billion to a staggering $14.8 billion, there's little appetite for
celebration.
Civil and criminal cases stemming
from the July 2006 tunnel ceiling collapse continue, though on Monday the family of Milena Del Valle
announced a $6 million settlement with Powers Fasteners, the company that
manufactured the epoxy blamed by investigators for the accident. Lawsuits are
pending against other Big Dig contractors, and Powers Fasteners still faces a
manslaughter indictment.
Officially, Dec. 31 marks the end of the joint venture that teamed megaproject
contractor Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff with the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority to build the dizzying array of underground highways,
bridges, ramps and a new tunnel under Boston Harbor — all while the city
remained open for business.
The project was so complex it's been
likened to performing open heart surgery on a patient while the patient is wide
awake.
Some didn't know if they'd live to
see it end.
Enza Merola had a front row seat on
the Big Dig from the front window of her pastry shop — stacked neatly with
tiramisu, sfogliatelle and brightly colored Italian
cookies — in Boston's North End.
During the toughest days of the
project, the facade of Marie's Pastry Shop, named after her sister, was
obscured from view. The only way customers could find the front door was along
a treacherous path through heavy construction.
"For a while we thought we
weren't going to make it," Merola said.
"But you know, we hung in there."
The Central Artery/Third Harbor
Tunnel Project — as the Big Dig is officially known — has its roots in the
construction of the hulking 1950's era elevated Central Artery that cut a swath
through the center of Boston, lopping off the waterfront from downtown and casting a
shadow over some of the city's oldest neighborhoods.
Almost as soon as the ribbon was cut
on the elevated highway in 1959, many were already wishing it away.
One was Frederick Salvucci, a city kid for whom the demolition of the old
Central Artery became a lifelong quest.
"It was always a beautiful
city, but it had this ugly scar through it," said Salvucci,
state transportation secretary during the project's planning stages.
Rather than build a new elevated
highway, Salvucci and others pushed a far more
radical solution — burying it.
Easier
said than done.
Those who built the Big Dig would
have to undertake the massive highway project in the cramped confines of
Boston's narrow, winding streets, some dating to pre-Colonial days.
Of all the project's Rubik's
Cube-like engineering challenges, none was more daunting than the first — how
to build a wider tunnel directly underneath a narrower existing elevated
highway while preventing the overhead highway from collapsing.
To solve the problem, engineers
created horizontal braces as wide as the new tunnel, then cut away the elevated
highway's original metal struts and gently lowered them onto the braces — even
as cars crawled along overhead, their drivers oblivious to the work below.
It was the just one of what would be
referred to as the Big Dig's "engineering marvels."
The Big Dig's long history is also
littered with wrong turns — some unavoidable, others self-inflicted.
One of the biggest occurred in 2004
when water started pouring through a wall of the recently opened I-93 tunnel
under downtown Boston. An investigation found the leak was caused by the failure
to clear debris that became caught in the concrete in the wall during
construction. Hundreds of smaller drips, most near the ceiling, were also
found.
Some delays were unrelated to
construction.
The Leonard P. Zakim
Bunker Hill Bridge — the project's signature element — went through dozens of
revisions as designers labored to come up with the most practical and elegant
way to cross the Charles River.
But the project's darkest day came
near the end of construction in 2006 when suspended concrete ceiling panels in
a tunnel leading to Logan
Airport collapsed, crushing a car and
killing Del Valle, 39, a passenger in the vehicle driven by her husband.
The tunnel was shut down for months
as each of the remaining panels was inspected and a new fastening system
installed. A federal investigation blamed the use of the wrong kind of epoxy
and the Massachusetts attorney general indicted the epoxy manufacturer.
Four workers also were killed
working on the project. During peak construction, more than 5,000 workers
labored daily on the project.
The project's escalating budget also
became an unwanted part of its legacy.
In 2000, former Big Dig head James Kerasiotes resigned after failing to disclose $1.4 billion
in overruns. A frustrated Congress capped the federal contribution.
"It never should have taken so
long. It never should have been so expensive," said former Gov. Michael
Dukakis, who left office just as major construction was to begin.
For those who grew up with the noise
and clutter of the old Central Artery, the transformation of downtown Boston
is still a wonder to behold.
The darkened parking lots under the
old elevated highway have been replaced by parks, dubbed the Rose Kennedy
Fitzgerald Greenway after the mother of Sen. Edward Kennedy,
who grew up in the North
End. Buildings that once turned their
backs to the old Central Artery are finding ways to open their doors to the
parkway.
Mayor Thomas Menino,
who presided over the city during most of the construction, said that for the
first time in half a century, residents can walk from City Hall to the
waterfront without trudging under a major highway.
"When I came into office in
1993, people said your city isn't going to survive," he said. "Now we
have a beautiful open space in the heart of the city. It knits the downtown
with the waterfront. All those dire predictions by the experts didn't come
true."
Drivers also give the Big Dig a big thumbs up.
A study by the Turnpike Authority
found the Big Dig cut the average trip through Boston
from 19.5 minutes to 2.8 minutes.
"Before we drive bumper to
bumper, but now they are moving very well," said Gamal
Ahmed, 38, who has been driving a cab in Boston for seven years. "Sometimes we
are stuck, but not like before."
For Salvucci,
who warns gridlock could soon return without a major commitment to public
transportation, the Big Dig — for all its whiz-bang engineering — was always
second to the city itself.
"The Big Dig is not a highway
with an incidental city adjacent to it. It is a living city that happens to
have some major highway infrastructure within it and that highway
infrastructure had to be rebuilt," he said. "This was not elective
surgery. It had to be done."
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Associated Press writer Rodrique Ngowi contributed to
this report.
Bilal Almasri